Jesus Looks Like Old, Rusty Metal Trailers

Imagine driving down a country freeway. You look out the window as you pass a rusty, half broken down trailer, being slowly eaten away by the weather. If you are like me, this moment fills with delight as you stare into the beauty of Jesus right there on the side of that road, rusting away.

What? That’s not what came to your mind? Rusty trailers don’t become encounters with God for you too?

Then I suppose I better back up a few steps and explain.

At the end of December, I published a post called The Satisfied Life. If you haven’t read it yet, please do, or you’ll miss some of what this post is about (click here to read). God had started teaching me how to rest. Frankly, I have been failing at it pretty consistently. I mean, after all, how does one “do” rest? How do you “do” “just be?” I’m finding myself not alone in this struggle. My friend Esther expresses this process best in her recent post, His Grace. She says:

“I know where I should be at emotionally… but my heart isn’t fully there yet. I’m sad. I’m tired of the process.

“I began telling God this during my walk, and the words of Paul came to mind as he said: ‘I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances. I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation… I can do all this through him who gives me strength’ (Philippians 4:11-13 italics are mine). The repetition of “learned” stuck out to my heart. Paul indicates that the process of becoming content with where the Lord has placed him is a learning process, it doesn’t just happen overnight. There’s hope for me yet. And he concludes his statement saying that this learning to be content happens because God gives him the strength. He doesn’t conjure the feelings alone, but God supplies him with what he needs.” (Esther Wright, For the rest go to Wright Reflections: His Grace)

Learning. Growing. Trying. Failing. Striving. Resting.

As I read her post, I felt so liberated by it. Like the author of Hebrews, I realized that although the rest of salvation has already been freely given to us, we have to wrestle, to push, to enter that rest. (Heb 4:11) It seems like a contradiction, but that’s when the value of learning becomes so key. Learning means I don’t know it all. Learning means I’m not there yet, but I’m getting better at it. Learning means I fail, make mistakes, and miss it along the way, but I keep growing. We learn to rest.

And there are layers to learning to rest. Here are the ones I’ve been exploring.

Layer 1: Be– The first gift God gave you is being. Before you ever made a decision, before you even had a heartbeat, you were. It’s not simply “what gifts has God given me?” It’s “My very existence is his greatest gift.” Look at the garden. Man was commanded to what? “Be fruitful and multiply. Fill the earth and subdue it.” (Gen 1:28) Notice that in this command, Adam is told to do two things he already naturally does by simply “being.” To have dominion is simply to walk in the gift of authority he was already walking in as head of creation, and the second is to take his own being and reproduce it over the whole earth. To fill the earth with “being.” It was never a “doing” lifestyle, it was a “being” lifestyle. Man corrupted this gift through choosing to find his being apart from God in the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, but Jesus came to restore the gift of being. To rest is, at its core, a command to “just be.” Think of what you do when you rest. You sit. You sleep. You eat. You aren’t very productive, you are simply taking care of whatever you need to to be the most healthy and whole version of yourself. To rest is a process of returning to what is most fully you.

Layer 2: Know His Being– God’s first declaration of his nature is “I am that I am” (Exodus 3:14) Just as we are called to

rest by just being, we experience God by experiencing His being. He never changes, He never strives, He never loses His temper, and nothing ever catches Him off guard. He is always at peace, always joyful, always loving, always living life to the fullest. God is the “I AM.” He is the ever resting one, who exists, and causes all things to exist because of His character–His being. Because God is, all things are. We have to seek to know God, not by striving to somehow earn His affections or to prove our devotion, but by experiencing His constant being. As we choose to “just be,” we can choose to freely receive the Being of the Uncreated One. Remember, knowledge is an experience. Cease striving and know.

Layer 3: Experience the “Logos” in all creation– This is a weird and slightly theological way of saying that you are meant not only to be, but to be in harmony with all the “being” of everything around you. I expound upon this in my Satisfied Life post more than I will here, but you are meant to feel God in all creation. This is easier with things like nature, and much harder in things like your annoying neighbor or dorm-mate. The character, beauty, and personality of God are singing forth from all creation, but we rarely hear it. As you learn to just be, you must also learn to let everything else “just be.” Not meaning passively accepting everything as “just the way it is,” but instead asking “how do I see God in this?” and then experiencing the response.

It is layer 3 that humanity often misses entirely. We know ourselves, we know God in the Bible and our “devotion” times, but we don’t see or feel Him in everything. There’s God, then there’s the rusty trailer, but we often fail to see God in the rusty trailer.

At this point you may be saying “well, I can see God in the tree, but God didn’t make that piece of junk. People did.” True, but who made the people? Who made the iron, the wood, the creativity that birthed that thing you now call junk? Who made the earth that is eating it, or the invisible force that is slowly returning the iron to dust? What holds every fiber of that piece of junk together? How is it that this junk even gets to exist in the moment you look at it? Something is at work in that crumbling relic of modern man that is eternally captivating. Look closer and you’ll see it.

Isaiah didn’t see it. He was religious, but didn’t feel especially close to God. He was a kind of “go with the flow” person, living and loving the status quo, talking the same old talk as everyone else. I’m sure that much like me, he often looked around at the brokenness of the world– the sin, the evil, the destruction –and thought God distant. He probably looked at the rusting junk laying in the dirt and felt nothing. But one day, this man had a visitation.

As he went to pray, he saw the Lord of Glory filling the temple. Blinding light, smoke, a throne, and six winged angels with bone shaking voices, crying out “HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, is the Lord Almighty! The whole earth is filled with His glory!” (Isaiah 6:3, emphasis mine) He immediately realized he had been blind, and living a life of corruption. Then God set him free.
I can only imagine Isaiah’s surprise as he meditated on the haunting, overwhelming phrase the angels kept repeating. The whole earth is filled with His glory. What a paradigm shift.

But God, what about war? The whole earth is filled with His glory. What about poverty? The whole earth is filled with His glory. What about all the pollution and waste? The whole earth is filled with His glory. cleansed him by touching him with it. Once the fire of God had touched him, he freely volunteered to go forth as God’s voice, letting his people know that like him, they too were blind to the truth.

I’m not saying that evil is good, and good evil. I’m saying that within all things the glory of God can be seen. Somewhere within the being of every thing on this planet, God is there. His nature may have been abused, twisted, perverted, or covered over, but it is there somewhere. When you see from the perspective of the angels, there is nowhere you can look in the whole earth that is not filled with the glory of God.

Listen to the rocks. You can hear them groaning for the day when they can fully reveal that glory. All creation awaits that day when it will be restored so that its glory is impossible to miss. Everything is meant to reveal God. All things can be enjoyed to the measure that they reveal God, and all things to some measure reveal Him. As Christians, it is our privilege to rest. From this place of rest, we can reveal to the world what is God in the junk around us, and what is perversion.

Jesus wants all to see that He can be found in an old, rusty metal trailer on the side of the road. There is glory all around you, do you see it?

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4 thoughts on “Jesus Looks Like Old, Rusty Metal Trailers”

So is your first name the or kars or karsten or karstenkaz? No matter!

I’m glad you linked with December’s part a and then delivered January’s part b. This Sunday I heard a message on the importance of listening. After the worship service, I then completely blew the basic point made by standing in front of another person as he spoke and thinking about what I wanted to say. Sunday’s message and your two posts remind me to be present and enjoy God and others in that moment.

Haha. My Name is Karsten Kaczmar. And I can so relate. Especially since that second message I posted. I’ve been working really hard at truly listening. I’m very good at analyzing and I’m very intuitive, so I often find myself analyzing rather than truly listening. So often I have an agenda (even if that agenda is simply to be “helpful”) and I don’t even realize it! It is so hard to simply be with someone. Let them be them, and you be you, just two people being, and experiencing each other. That is John 17 relationship to me. That’s the Body being one. That’s the good life. 🙂

Dear thekarstenkaz you don’t know me but I do hope we will get to know each other in the near future. I thought this message was so uplifting, I do indeed love your focus, thank you . After reading your comment on Dru’s Blog my heart was touched and I wanted to know you better so I could offer you the Awards that I have to give ..why because as I said I appreciate your focus and because I want to encourage you in it, let me explain a little more about the the Awards….

I have been nominated for a few Awards by people wanting to encourage and uplift me and I now also have the opportunity to do this for others. I’m very thankful for their kindness and for their faithfulness to do as God asks us to do as the Body of Christ and that is to take an interest in what others are doing for Him and encourage them in this. So I would like to nominate you for the same reasons to encourage, commend and uplift you and so you can do the same for others.

I have posted each Award but not published them yet but will as soon as I have the set amount of accepting Nominations, if you have not received any of these Awards and would like one, or any of them or all, then please let me know within a week so I can add your name to the Award lists or if not so I can find someone who would like to receive them.

I love how you’re expounding upon this topic. I think it’s extremely worth looking into and I appreciate where you took it. Lately, every time someone talks about learning to “be” and freely enjoy the relationship we have with God, my heart feels full in a way that tells me, “this is truth, this is where I want to be, constantly.” it’s exciting to hear from you as you venture into this topic as well. I especially connected with your 2nd layer were you said: “We have to seek to know God, not by striving to somehow earn His affections or to prove our devotion, but by experiencing His constant being. As we choose to ‘just be,’ we can choose to freely receive the Being of the Uncreated One. Remember, knowledge is an experience. Cease striving and know.” So often I make it all so hard, but it’s really not, it shouldn’t be. Thank you for your words. I’m honored that you quoted me in your post.